Health Buzz: Autism Study Was an 'Elaborate Fraud'

Reader Comments

Back to article

It's amazing to me that the amount of children receiving vaccines in the last 13 years has decrease; however, the amount of children that have autism has increased. I think we need to start looking at environmental causes. The link between vaccines and autism has been broken (thank god). Let it go and find the real cause.

Miranda of CA 2:26PM January 06, 2011

Autism, like Parkinson's, like Alzheimer's, like ALS, like Cancer is a protein misfolding disease. Probing Protein Stability with Non-Natural Amino Acids by Nediljko Budisa and Greta Pifat in 1997 describes Tellurium and Protein Misfolding. According to Dr. Andrew J Larner who in 1997 wrote Alzheimer's Disease, Kuf's Disease, Tellurium and Selenium he describes how the average body contains 600mg of Tellurium, stored primarily in bone, but also in some soft tissue. The MMR Vaccine contains aborted fetus tissue and hydrolyzed gelatin and the live Rubella virus. Fetal tissue would contain tellurium and I believe gelatin is made from bone and hoofs. Organisms like the live rubella virus in the MMR Vaccine can be tellurite resistant, or able to utilize tellurium as a replacement for sulfur in sulfur-mercury clusters. Therefore Tellurium can take the place of sulfur in the S-Hg-C angle of Thimerosal, making it Te-Hg-C. Cinnabar or Mercuric Sulfide Hg-S is the source of the red pigment vermilion. Rubella means little red. Thin vermilion is a dysmorphic feature found in autism syndrome. Thin vermilion is caused by the mutated or deleted Neurexin-1 that interacts with the misfolded neuroligins found in Autism. A fluorine-induced chemiluminescence detector can detect tellurium in bacteria. Dr. Wakefield's study is not a fraud.

Sharon of MA 2:04PM January 06, 2011

... who's Jenny McCarthy going to blame now?

stimpson65 of 1:05PM January 06, 2011

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

Back to article

Eat + Run

advertisement

advertisement